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MI5 chief says Salisbury nerve agent attack deliberate and targeted

Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found on a park bench in Salisbury. Photo: PA Wire/PA Images

The Salisbury nerve agent attack was a “deliberate and targeted” act, the head of MI5 declared in a speech on Monday.

In his first public comments since the poisoning in March, Andrew Parker accused the Kremlin of “flagrant breaches of international rules” and warned that the Russian government is pursuing an agenda through “aggressive and pernicious actions” by its military and intelligence services.

The director general of the Security Service highlighted the persistent danger from terrorism, revealing that 12 plots have been foiled by UK authorities in just over a year.

Director general of MI5 Andrew Parker has a 35-year career in intelligence. Credit: Stefan Rousseau/PA

Giving the first public speech outside the UK by a serving head of MI5, Mr Parker joined the international chorus of condemnation levelled at Moscow in the wake of Salisbury.

He described the attempted assassination of Sergei and Yulia Skripal, which saw the first use of a nerve agent in Europe since the Second World War, as a “deliberate and targeted malign activity” which risks Russia becoming a “more isolated pariah”.

He condemned the unprecedented level of disinformation following the attack and set out the need “to shine a light through the fog of lies, half-truths and obfuscation that pours out of their propaganda machine”.

The attack on former double agent Mr Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33, sparked a massive chemical alert.

A huge investigation to identify the would-be assassin or assassins is ongoing.

Screens erected outside the London Road cemetery in Salisbury where Sergei Skripal’s wife and son were laid to rest. Credit: PA

The British Government has pointed the finger at Russia, but Moscow has repeatedly denied responsibility.

Mr Skripal remains in hospital, while his daughter was released to a secure location last month.

Addressing an audience of security chiefs in Berlin, Mr Parker praised the international response to Salisbury, in which 28 European countries agreed to support the UK in expelling scores of Russian diplomats.

He stressed that European intelligence partnerships have never been more crucial to combat the “intense and unrelenting international terrorist threat” in parallel with growing aggression from hostile activity by states.

Mr Parker warned that Islamic State still aspires to direct “devastating” and “more complex” attacks despite territorial losses, in the wake of 45 attacks across Europe since 2016.

Thanking European security agencies for their support in the investigation following the Manchester bombing nearly a year ago, the intelligence chief disclosed that MI5 has thwarted 12 plots alongside police since the Westminster atrocity in March 2017.

This brings the total number of disrupted attacks since 2013 to 25.

Mr Parker said he is “confident about our ability to tackle these threats, because of the strength and resilience of our democratic systems, the resilience of our societies and the values we share with our European partners”.

“European intelligence cooperation today is simply unrecognisable to what it looked like five years ago," the director general said.

Mr Parker, who has a 35-year career in intelligence, added: “In today’s uncertain world we need that shared strength more than ever.”

He singled out a coalition of domestic security services known as the Counter Terrorism Group, saying it is the “largest multinational counter-terrorism enterprise in the world” where “real-time intelligence sharing” involves “thousands of exchanges on advanced secure networks every week”.